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Oct 2024

Hi, hi! This post is more tailored for web novelist, but I wanted to share some resources I use when writing my stories. I knew that at the start when you are lost and don’t know what to use or what’s more convenient for, this is mostly subjective.

Here is a list of writing programs that you can use for free:

  1. Old plain Google Docs
  2. Old plain Words Documents
  3. Reedsy Editor: https://reedsy.com/write-a-book2 This is super great and the main one I use to write my stories. It has a word counter, you can set goals, and it has many functionalities. It is great 10/10, and the best part is that it is FREE, and it autosaves your work!
  4. Microsoft OneNote
  5. Evernote: https://evernote.com/1
  6. Dropbox paper: https://www.dropbox.com/paper/start
  7. There are others that, of course, are paid, like Scrivener, Notion, Dabble Writer, etc, but we are here mostly for free.

Since Tapas doesn’t accept AI-generated pictures, here are some sites where you can find royalty-free pictures. Remember that to make a cover and character sheets, etc, you don’t need to be an expert, and using royalty-free pictures is always the safe bet. You can even find vectors and illustrations for free, too. Here are the ones I use:

  1. Canva: https://www.canva.com/ Canva is free and has free assets and pictures.
  2. Unsplash: https://unsplash.com/1
  3. Pexels: https://www.pexels.com/1 Pexels even has royalty-free videos.
  4. Depositphotos: Yes, they have an area with free pictures and assets https://depositphotos.com/free-images.html?utm_source=transactional&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=onboarding_2_freef_499&utm_term=button&utm_content=en&iterable_campaign=3978287&iterable_template=98532851
  5. Adobe Stock Free: https://stock.adobe.com/free1

Sites where you can learn and improve your writing:

  1. Scribophile (Here you access to critique exchanges where you can receive feedback on your writing and offer critiques in return)
  2. The Write Practice
  3. Writers Helping Writers
  4. Reedsy Learning
  5. Project Gutenberg
  6. edX (on this one, I took a university course for free called “The Craft of Storytelling” from the University of Alaska Fairbanks, and thanks to that, I’m writing the story for the contest right now. Super recommended!)

So, if you have any site or something to add, feel free to drop it on the thread.

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    Oct '24
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    Nov '24
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So I have an unusual recommendation that may not work for everyone. Awhile back, I used to use Celtx, which is actually a script writing tool. However, I found it very useful for developing my characters and writing notes. Because I felt like the layout was simple and it had a lot in its character information section that really made me think about who my characters were. It made me truly fall in love with my own fictional characters, which is something I struggle to do. Using Celtx somehow made them so much more real to me.

Oh, nice! I checked it out, and it looks like a solid place. I have never heard of it before. Maybe it's because I hang more in novel writing than Script wiring, but it seems to have good features. I will add it to my stash of writing tools.

It may have a little too many features for most novel writers. I usually ignore them all and focus my attention on what I can use. I like the storyboard and the catalog. They let me just make quick references to characters, weapons, and scenes so that I can keep the writing momentum going even when I forget something. I go back, check a storyboard card or click on a character profile real quick then carry on. :stuck_out_tongue:

It’s not much but using the notepad app for random brainstorming ideas could be helpful

(post withdrawn by author, will be automatically deleted in 24 hours unless flagged)

LibraOffice, Google Office and OpenOffice are good free options. Google has good presets that I like using, like the sheets project schedule for my upload schedule.

NotebookLM by Google is mainly used as a studytool, but I like using it to organize my manuscript notes with timelines, summary, table of contents, and more. It generates a fake podcast about your notes as well if you're more of an audio learner.

NaNoWriMo (November) to kick your but in gear to just focus on writing as much as you can in a month. They have a lot of resources as well.

There are these sites to help you organize your manuscript:
- LivingWriter
- Scrivener1
- Novlr

Grammer/SpellCheck/Puncuation and writing improvement:
- Grammarly
- WordTune1
- ProWritingAid
- Reverso

Not quite free, but to create a bookcover on a budget:
- Canva1
- PlaceIt2

This is a great thread with lots of really useful resources!

Unfortunately, I will never use any of them, because I have never heard of organization. Like @BreeBaxter, I just use Google Docs. My folders all look like this:

No, I have no idea what the difference is between any of these files.

And this is the most detailed and organized outline I have ever created in my life:

Maybe one day I will fall in love with some awesome app/program for writers. But I've only recently stopped writing all my drafts out by hand, so...

I suggest using the NotebookLM by Google, it connects to your google docs/drive. CLick all those files you cant tell apart and itll organize them for you

@Paul_Tromba When I was looking for a program besides the free ones I already use, I was between Scrivener or Atticus, and honestly, I would have preferred to use Atticus. I will eventually get it because I feel the way Scrivener saves in different folders and the backup is too complicated.

@BreeBaxter and @king-goldfish I have never used Google Docs to do my writing per se (gosh, it is crazy, I know), and I just use it to share with my beta readers. And King, that's such an organized outline. My outlines consist of a minimum of 5k words with background thrown around, dialogues, scenes, etc., and then it became chaos 🫠🤣

A lot of ppl have stopped using GoogleDocs, because of their terms of service lots of smut fanfic writers found their docs deleted or couldnt access their accounts anymore

:eyes: Wow, that's crazy. I did not know that. I don't write fanfics, but that's a bit on the extreme side of Google. I guess it is because the copyright of the names or the artist made a silent boycott? I know as for me, that Grammarly doesn't work well in Google Docs when I build the documents to be shared.

no, it was for sexual content which is apparently against their TOS, it was a change they added that recieved huge pushback



I had to stop using Google docs except for editorial sharing because Chrome slows my computer so much that I switched to Firefox and Google purposefully makes it glitch out every few words, causing you to type whatever you were typing a line up or down inside another word.

Whoa, I had no idea about that! Thank you for the information. I have been moving off of Google in general (finally switched my default browser to Firefox, which was a lot easier than I was fearing it would be), but this does make me want to find an alternative to Docs. I already download all my files regularly cause I am paranoid about having only one copy of them, but... Google Docs is just so convenient for sharing and track changes. :sob: I like it so much better than Word.

Guess I need to go back over the resources in this thread after all lol

Ded :upside_down: oof, for my next story, I might use then a Word Document to share.

@Paul_Tromba oooh, see that it happened to me the times I tried to write per se there. So I was not the only one